hybrid desiccated by heat and dryness (Sydney) as loss of blue color is visible on these levels. In
biology and
ecology, desiccation refers to the drying out of a living organism, such as when aquatic animals are taken out of water,
slugs are exposed to salt, or when plants are exposed to sunlight or drought. Ecologists frequently study and assess various organisms' susceptibility to desiccation. For example, in one study the investigators found that
Caenorhabditis elegans dauer is a true anhydrobiote that can withstand extreme desiccation and that the basis of this ability is founded in the metabolism of
trehalose.
DNA damage and repair Several bacterial species have been shown to accumulate
DNA damage upon desiccation.
Deinococcus radiodurans is extremely resistant to
ionizing radiation. The functions necessary to survive ionizing radiation are also necessary to survive prolonged desiccation. Radiation resistance is considered to be an incidental consequence of the organism's evolutionary adaptation to dehydration, a common physiological stress in nature. DNA double-strand breaks are repaired principally by a RecA-dependent recombination process that requires the presence of two genome copies. NHEJ appears to be the preferred pathway for repairing double-strand breaks caused by desiccation during the stationary phase. NHEJ can repair double-strand breaks even when only one chromosome is present in a cell. Upon exposure to extreme dryness,
Bacillus subtilis endospores acquire DNA-double strand breaks and DNA-protein crosslinks. ==Broadcasting==